Drive boasts Seagate’s most efficient power consumption

Seagate today announced it's shipping to enterprise customers the world's first 8TB hard disk drive, raising the bar against rivals such as Western Digital, which uses helium to boost its own drive capacity.

Seagate's new 8TB drive comes in a 3.5-in form factor and is aimed at allowing corporate data centers to create more dense storage arrays for cloud content, object-based storage and data backups.

Seagate

Seagate’s 6TB hard drive, announced in April, had an areal density increase that lept from from 831 bits per square inch in the previous 4TB drive to 1,000 bits per square inch.

"Public and private data centers are grappling with efficiently storing massive amounts of unstructured digital content," John Rydning, IDC's research vice president for hard disk drives, said in a statement. "Seagate's new 8TB HDD provides IT managers with a new option for improving storage density in the data center, thus helping them to tackle one of the largest and fastest growing data categories within enterprise storage economically."

Just four months ago, Seagate released its first 6TB, enterprise-class hard disk drive, which was 28% faster than its earlier 4TB drive.

Using helium, WD was able to increase its drive capacity by 50%; more importantly, it reduced power usage by 23% and overall weight by 38% compared to pervious 4TB drives.

At the time WD announced its helium drive, Seagate representatives said they weren't ruling out the future use of the lighter weight gas, which reduces friction in a spinning disk.

While Seagate is not using helium in its new 8TB drive, it's also not releasing details about how it has been able to increase the areal density on the disk platters. A spokesman said that information will be "shared shortly."

With SMR technology, Seagate has been able to increase bit density on its platters by 25% or more. Unlike standard perpendicular magnetic recording, where data tracks rest side by side, SMR overlaps the tracks on a platter like shingles on a roof, thereby allowing Seagate to squeeze more tracks together on a platter.

Seagate

How data tracks are aligned with conventional perpendicular magnetic recording

How tracks are spaced using Shingled Magnetic Recording. Notice tracks are overlapped like the shingles on a roof, affording greater density.

Seagate’s 6TB hard drive, announced in April, used SMR and increased areal density from 831 bits per square inch in the previous 4TB drive to 1,000.

With SMR technology, Seagate has been able to increase bit density on its platters by 25% or more. Unlike standard perpendicular magnetic recording, where data tracks rest side by side, SMR overlaps the tracks on a platter like shingles on a roof, thereby allowing Seagate to squeeze more tracks together on a platter.

Seagate did say its new 8TB Enterprise Capacity 3.5 HDD increases system capacity using fewer components at lower power costs.

The drive boasts the best watts-per-gigabyte to date for enterprise bulk data storage, Seagate said.